Glamorous Baltimore Kitchen

A young professional couple had huge dreams for their little kitchen. It would be the place they’d cook sensational new dishes, the spot they’d stylishly entertain friends. Only one quandary stood in their way—how to pack all of that function and fabulousness into 225 square feet, the extent of space available in their new Baltimore rowhouse.

A Wolf cooktop and ovens let the homeowners flex their culinary muscles on one side of the light-filled kitchen while, on the opposite wall, a wet bar with a Sub-Zero wine refrigerator caters to entertaining.

Playing off the grid pattern established by a wall of muntined windows that bathe the kitchen in natural light, Hammel used paneled cabinetry as she set up two distinct zones separated by a showpiece island. A cooktop and expansive vent hood sit on one wall.

It’s mimicked on the opposite wall, where a wet bar quenches the homeowners’ thirst for serious socializing. “When the couple are entertaining, they can cook and prep the meal while their friends can access and enjoy cocktails on the other side,” Hammel says. “The setup created instant symmetry.”

Organic shapes, including curved faucets, knobs, and a fan-shape marble mosaic backsplash, contrast the grid pattern seen in windows and cabinetry.

Good looks were vital—for the sophisticated couple and the home’s open floor plan. “You see the kitchen when you walk upstairs to the main living area,” Hammel says. “That’s why we gave the island a dramatic waterfall edge in Nuvolato marble. I like its impact, its smooth lines, its sense of movement.” Its gray hue repeats on cabinetry, which runs to the ceiling for maximum storage. Substantial satin-brass hardware pops against the neutral canvas. “Scale was important,” Hammel says. “With 10-foot-high ceilings, hardware can disappear.”

The oversize hardware and twin pendants infuse an industrial edge that nods to Baltimore’s history. Milk-glass shades and an antique-brass finish on the light fixtures layer in a subtle forever-there vibe. “The rowhouse is new, but I wanted some elements to feel like they’d been here awhile,” Hammel says. She also chose 3.5-inch red oak floorboards—rather than wide planks—to emulate an earlier age. The wood flooring adds warmth that’s echoed in brass elements, from the banded-and-riveted hood to faucets and bar stools that finish the kitchen in sparkling style.